Who is Muqtada al-Sadr?
As Iraq dissolves into civil war, few men wield more
power on its bloodstained streets than Muqtada al-Sadr.
In just four years, his potent blend of Shia
nationalism, enforced by the 70,000-strong Mehdi Army,
has made him a hero to millions - and put him top of
America's hit list. But does the future rest in his
hands?
By Patrick Cockburn
02/15/07 "The
Independent" --- - Whatever else the US
intended when it invaded Iraq in 2003 it was not to hand
power to an Islamic militant in a black turban with dark
staring eyes who denounces Washington and Israel in the
same breath. The claim by two American officials
yesterday that Muqtada al-Sadr, the radical Shia
nationalist cleric, has left for Iran is a measure of
how far the US would like to see him out of the Iraqi
political scene.
Allegations by US officials in Baghdad have little
credibility after almost four years in which they have
been repeatedly exposed as untrue. Supporters of Muqtada
immediately denied that he was in Iran and either
refused to say where he was or asserted that he was in
the Shia holy city of Najaf. He has every reason to keep
his location a secret, since in the past the US military
has said it will either kill or capture him if it can.
Two of his most important aides have been killed in
mysterious circumstances in the past week.
We may be close to a final confrontation between the US
and Muqtada, perhaps the most important political figure
in Iraq. The US and Iraqi governments are starting their
much-heralded campaign to regain control of Baghdad from
the Sunni insurgents and Shia militias, of which the
most important is Muqtada's 70,000-strong Mehdi Army.
Iraq's borders with Iran have been closed for 72 hours.
Muqtada himself has no doubt that he is under threat. In
an interview in January he said: "I have moved my family
to a safe place. I have even made a will and I
continually move around so they have trouble knowing
exactly where I am." He has been trying to avoid
becoming a US target. He plays down his own strength.
Asked about claims that the army and police are
infiltrated by his men, Muqtada said the reverse was
true and "it is our militias [that] are swarming with
spies. It doesn't take much to infiltrate the army of
the people." He denies that the death squads killing
Sunni are really members of the Mehdi Army.
Probably, Muqtada and the men around him believe that if
he can avoid a direct clash with the US army then he
will win in the end. His popularity among the Shia is
great. In the past few weeks his men have stopped
carrying their weapons so openly in the streets and have
closed a number of their offices in Baghdad. But the
militiamen are seldom far away. In Sadr City they have
only retreated deeper into the vast shanty town of two
million people that is the greatest bastion of Sadrist
support.
***
The rise of Muqtada has been one of the surprises of the
four years since the US invaded. Saddam Hussein must
have been astonished as he went to his execution to hear
the name: "Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqatada!" shouted by
jeering onlookers. Had Saddam realised the potential of
this strange, enigmatic young man before the invasion
then he would doubtless have killed him, as he did
Muqtada's father and two of his brothers eight years
ago.
It is difficult to avoid Muqtada's presence in Baghdad.
Dressed in his dark clerical robes, he peers menacingly
from posters on thousands of walls. His Mehdi Army
militiamen control not only Sadr City but much of the
capital and southern Iraq. He is an essential prop to
the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, in
which six ministers belong to his movement.
Yet the source of his power has remained a mystery to
the US and many Iraqi politicians. Few men have been so
consistently underestimated. He is not a great orator,
nor does he have huge charisma. His movement has limited
resources. Until recently, his militiamen were unpaid
and provided their own weapons. He does not have a
powerful foreign backer. In spite of US efforts to link
him to Iran and claim that he has fled there, he and his
movement have traditionally been suspicious of the
Iranians, and they of him.
The real source of his vast influence among the Shia of
Iraq - the Sunni see him as orchestrating the death
squads that have killed so many of them - is that he
promulgates a blend of religion and nationalism that
they find deeply attractive. He comes from the deeply
revered Sadr clerical family that provided so many
martyrs under Saddam Hussein. Some American commanders
may wonder if it is wise for the US to pick a fight with
a religious leader regarded with cult-like devotion by
millions of Shias. They may also reflect that he is not
just popular with the poor masses of Shia Iraq - his
picture also hangs on the wall in many Iraqi police
stations and army barracks. Some of these will be the
very people on whom US and Iraqi commanders will rely in
order to regain control of Baghdad.
It is impossible to explain Iraq today without
understanding the reasons behind the astonishing rise of
Muqtada al-Sadr and his movement in less than four
years. Muqtada appears to have come from nowhere. In
reality, he is heir to a social and political movement
with a history that stretches back almost half a
century. In addition, he could not have become so
powerful so fast had he not come from a family that
provided some of the most revered leaders of the Shiah
clergy in their long and bitter struggle with Saddam
Hussein.
***
The most common poster of the Sadrist movement shows
three men in black clerical garb with an Iraqi flag
behind them. The first figure is Muqtada himself. The
second is of his father, Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr,
assassinated along with two of his sons on the orders of
Saddam outside Najaf in January 1999. The third is of
Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr, a distant cousin and
father-in-law of Muqtada, a revolutionary Shia who was
executed together with his sister in 1980. The poster
perfectly illustrates the blend of religion and
nationalism that has made Sadrism so potent.
The Sadrist movement, of which Muqtada is the current
leader, was founded by Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr. It was he
who sought to interpret Shia Islam and organise its
adherents in the 1950s and 1960s in order to oppose the
powerful Iraqi Communist Party and the nationalist Baath
Party. He helped to establish the Shia religious party
al-Dawa to counter secularism.
At first, Baqir seemed to be leading a doomed attempt to
revive Shia Islam to struggle with the problems of the
modern age. He moved away from the traditional political
quietism of the Hawza, the Shia religious hierarchy in
Iraq, towards finding answers to the central questions
of political and economic life. Like so many other Shia
religious leaders, he did not lack courage. Even when
the Baathists were at the height of their power and
notorious for their cruelty, Baqir refused to bow to
them. In a famous saying he vowed that: "If my little
finger were Baathist I would cut it off." Saddam
Hussein, particularly frightened of insurgent Islam
after the triumph of Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran, struck
back. In 1980 he killed Baqir, his sister and hundreds
of his followers.
But the Sadrist movement did not die. Iraq's Shia
community, 60 per cent of Iraq's population, became
increasingly conscious of their identity as Saddam
Hussein blundered into the war with Iran and then
invaded Kuwait. In 1991 he crushed the great Shia
uprising and began to look for a Shia religious leader
whom he could co-opt. In a move he would come to regret,
he chose Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, a pupil and cousin of
Baqir and father of Muqtada, for this role.
Paradoxically, given the US allegations yesterday,
Saddam's regime was attracted by Sadiq because he was
anti-American and distant from Iran. But it swiftly
became alarmed when he launched a mass movement aimed at
addressing the immediate concerns of the impoverished
Shia masses that criticised the old religious hierarchy
as remote and cut off from day-to-day life.
A famous story is told of Sadiq illustrating his concern
for ordinary Iraqis. A man looking for a religious
leader to follow asked each of them the price of
tomatoes. Some, more accustomed to being queried about
esoteric religious matters, were offended by such a
mundane question. The exception was Sadiq, who gave a
full response, detailing the prices of different types
of tomato. The man departed satisfied, saying he had at
last found a religious leader who knew about life as it
was really lived by Iraqis. He said: "I choose the one
who knows my suffering, who is close to the poor and the
disinherited." The latter class of Iraqis was more
numerous in Iraq in the 1990s as the economy suffered
under the weight of sanctions.
Secularism, discredited by Saddam's failures, was on the
retreat and Islam was resurgent. Sadiq spoke for the
newly impoverished Shia masses. But his discourse was
also patriotic, opposed to foreign interference in Iraq,
whether it came from the US or Iran. He called for Sunni
and Shia unity. He would often begin his sermons with
the refrain: "No, no to America; no, no, to Israel; no,
no to the Devil."
His strength was - and this is also true of his son
Muqtada - that he expressed the feelings of the Shia
poor. A study of Muqtada by the Brussels-based
International Crisis Group says: "The relatively
well-to-do, urbanised, educated or commercial classes
eyed him wearily, viewing his plebeian, militant Shiism
as a source of instability and a threat to their
interests." Sadiq even called on Saddam himself to
repent. He wore the shroud of those who expect to die,
and with reason. It became clear to the Iraqi leader
that he was a nurturing an increasingly dangerous enemy.
He reacted violently, as he invariably did against
opponents, and ordered his security men to ambush Sadiq
and his sons in their car as they drove through the holy
city of Najaf. As news of their death spread, it sparked
the most serious riots seen in Iraq between the uprising
of 1991 and the invasion of 2003.
***
Muqtada was not necessarily the natural political and
religious heir to Sadiq. He was his father's fourth son,
and 25 years old when Sadiq was killed (assuming that
Muqtada's official birth date of 1974 is correct). He
was under surveillance by Saddam's security men -
perhaps the most suspicious men on earth - but they
concluded he was harmless.
Muqtada had hidden strengths. Most importantly, there
was a large constituency of Iraqis waiting to embrace
him. In April 2003, as Baghdad fell, he instantly
stepped forward to fill a vacuum. Nobody else was
offering to lead the young, poorly educated, violent but
devout Shia masses. Their ferocious looting of Baghdad
was a sign of their rage towards the powers that be.
They, like him, were suspicious of the conciliatory Shia
religious hierarchy in Najaf and the Iraqi exiles
returning from London and New York courtesy of the US
army. Muqtada represented those who hated Saddam, and
were grateful that he was deposed, but did not want to
replace him with a foreign occupation.
Muqtada's influence quickly became apparent. On 11
April, in his first Friday prayer sermon, he called on
the faithful to walk as pilgrims to Karbala to
commemorate Arba'in, the ritual commemorating 40 days'
mourning for the death of Imam Hussein. Absorbed by the
fall of Saddam, few observers noted the significance of
the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis walking for days to
Karbala waving their black and green flags.
Muqtada's followers had already demonstrated a more
menacing side to their movement: a willingness to use
violence against their enemies, real or imagined. Sayed
Majid al-Khoei, a liberal-minded and very able Shia
leader, the son of the Grand Ayatollah al-Khoei, had
returned early to Najaf. He had offered forgiveness to
those officials who had been compelled to cooperate with
Saddam Hussein. On 10 April he took Haider al-Killidar,
the administrator of the great golden domed shrine of
Imam Ali, back to his offices. They were soon trapped by
an angry crowd, many of whom were allegedly followers of
Muqtada. Shots were fired. Sayed Majid was dragged from
the shrine and knifed to death in the street.
The policy of the Shia hierarchy, notably Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, and of the previously exiled
religious parties, al-Dawa and SCIRI, was not to oppose
the US occupation but to use it to enable the Shia to
take power. They pressed the US envoy Paul Bremer to
hold elections that the Shia were bound to win.
Muqtada's line was different. He opposed the occupation
from the beginning. His father, Sadiq, had blamed the US
for sanctions that had brought the Iraqi poor to the
edge of starvation. His son was no less hostile. He
denounced the members of the Iraqi Governing Council,
which the Shia religious parties joined, as pawns of
America.
Not all was plain sailing. The Mehdi Army, his militia,
was only a shadowy force. The first Sadrist
demonstration I attended in October 2003 in the heart of
Sadr City was well organised, but only 3,000 people took
part. It was easy to underestimate the potential of his
movement, which Paul Bremer, the head of the ruling
Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), blindly proceeded
to do. He toyed with the idea of arresting Muqtada.
Meanwhile, the occupation was becoming ever more
unpopular. It failed to provide security, economic
reconstruction or democratic elections. The 70 per cent
of Iraqis who were unemployed before the invasion still
had no jobs.
The confrontation with the CPA happened almost by
accident. Muqtada delivered a sermon describing the 9/11
attack on the World Trade Center in New York as "a
miracle and a blessing from God". This was reprinted in
the Sadrist newspaper al Hawza. Bremer told one of his
staff: "Close down the rag." Within days, Sadr City and
the whole of southern Iraq was in flames as the Mehdi
Army - armed, enthusiastic but untrained young men -
took over the streets.
One of the cities seized by the militiamen was Kufa, on
the Euphrates and a short distance from Najaf. Soon
Muqtada and his militiamen were being besieged by 2,500
US soldiers. Here I had a nasty brush with the Mehdi
Army. The incident helped explain why so many Iraqis are
terrified by these black-clad militiamen.
I was sitting in the back of a car wearing a red and
white headress, or keffiyeh, primarily so that I
wouldn't be recognised as a foreigner in the tough Sunni
insurgent towns on the road to Najaf. We stopped at
checkpoint manned by the Mehdi Army. The Keffiyeh turned
out to be a bad idea. The militiamen recognised me as an
obvious Westerner. They started shouting that I was an
American. They were clutching their Kalashnikovs and I
did not think it would take much for them to kill us
all.
Finally they jumped into our car, clutching their
weapons, and told us to follow another car full of
militiamen to their headquarters in the main mosque in
Kufa. Once there they became less aggressive. They
offered me a cigarette, and, although I had given up
smoking some years before, it seemed unwise to refuse.
They leafed through a copy of The New Yorker and
muttered "haram (forbidden)" when they saw a cartoon of
a woman in a low-cut blouse. All the militiamen came
from Sadr City and said that they were quite willing to
die for Muqtada.
In a military sense, Muqtada and his militiamen lost
their confrontations with the US army in April and again
in August 2004. Many Iraqis blamed them for the
destruction in Najaf. But at the same time the Sadrists
had survived and shown their strength. Muqtada
demonstrated he was one of the central figures in Iraqi
politics and he had also learned to avoid, if at all
possible, direct military conflict with the US.
The following year Muqtada showed his political muscle.
While still denouncing the occupation, he took part in
the political process. He joined the Shia political
front, the United Iraqi Alliance, which triumphed in the
general elections in January and December 2005. In the
second election he won 32 out of 275 seats in
parliament, thus giving him veto power over the choice
of prime minister. There are six Sadrist ministers
running departments including health and transport. All
were soon stocked with supporters of Muqtada.
In 2006, the Mehdi Army extended its grip into most Shia
areas in Baghdad. After the attack on the Shia al-Askari
shrine on 22 February there were nationwide pogroms of
the Sunni. Mixed neighbourhoods began to disappear. Shia
who did not like the Mehdi Army welcomed them because
they were desperate for armed men from their own
community to protect them from death squads and suicide
bombers. They were also central to the operation of the
death squads killing Sunni where ever they found them.
By now, all Shia gunmen were being called Mehdi Army by
the Sunni. Muqtada said, defensively, that many of them
were not under his control. This was probably correct
but he did not try to rein them in. It was also true,
though, that by early 2007 all the Shia militias,
whatever they said in public, were intent on taking over
Baghdad and driving the Sunni into the south-west
quadrant of the city.
Probably it would be wiser for the US to include Muqtada
in the political process. He has far more legitimacy
among the Shia masses than many of the former exiles
whom the US would like to see in power. Accomodating and
controlling Muqtada and the great numbers of Iraqis he
represents is essential to stabilising Iraq, but instead
the US seems intent on trying to marginalise or
eliminate him.
Even if they succeed it will do them little good. The
Sadrist movement has surived many years of adversity
before under Saddam. The Shia masses are not going to
allow themselves to be robbed of power which they
believe rightly belongs to them. By driving Muqtada into
a corner, the US is forcing him to rely more and more on
Iran, though it is unlikely that he has fled there.
President Bush shows no sign of learning from his
failures in Iraq since 2003. For almost four years he
has been fighting the Sunni community. Now, by
confronting Muqtada, he is moving towards armed conflict
with the Shia as well.
Patrick Cockburn is the author of
The Occupation: War and
Resistance in Iraq
published by Verso